471 research outputs found
Slave-Boson Functional-Integral Approach to the Hubbard Model with Orbital Degeneracy
A slave-boson functional-integral method has been developed for the Hubbard
model with arbitrary, orbital degeneracy . Its saddle-point mean-field
theory is equivalent to the Gutzwiller approximation, as in the case of
single-band Hubbard model. Our theory is applied to the doubly degenerate () model, and numerical calculations have been performed for this model in the
paramagnetic states. The effect of the exchange interaction on the
metal-insulator (MI) transition is discussed. The critical interaction for the
MI transition is analytically calculated as functions of orbital degeneracy and
electron occupancy.Comment: Latex 20 pages, 9 figures available on request to
[email protected] Note: published in J. Physical Society of Japan with
some minor modification
On the correct continuum limit of the functional-integral representation for the four-slave-boson approach to the Hubbard model: Paramagnetic phase
The Hubbard model with finite on-site repulsion U is studied via the
functional-integral formulation of the four-slave-boson approach by Kotliar and
Ruckenstein. It is shown that a correct treatment of the continuum imaginary
time limit (which is required by the very definition of the functional
integral) modifies the free energy when fluctuation (1/N) corrections beyond
mean-field are considered. Our analysis requires us to suitably interpret the
Kotliar and Ruckenstein choice for the bosonic hopping operator and to abandon
the commonly used normal-ordering prescription, in order to obtain meaningful
fluctuation corrections. In this way we recover the exact solution at U=0 not
only at the mean-field level but also at the next order in 1/N. In addition, we
consider alternative choices for the bosonic hopping operator and test them
numerically for a simple two-site model for which the exact solution is readily
available for any U. We also discuss how the 1/N expansion can be formally
generalized to the four-slave-boson approach, and provide a simplified
prescription to obtain the additional terms in the free energy which result at
the order 1/N from the correct continuum limit.Comment: Changes: Printing problems (due to non-standard macros) have been
removed, 44 page
Spin and Charge Structure Factor of the 2-d Hubbard Model
The spin and charge structure factors are calculated for the Hubbard model on
the square lattice near half-filling using a spin-rotation invariant six-slave
boson representation. The charge structure factor shows a broad maximum at the
zone corner and is found to decrease monotonically with increasing interaction
strength and electron density and increasing temperature. The spin structure
factor develops with increasing interaction two incommensurate peaks at the
zone boundary and along the zone diagonal. Comparison with results of Quantum
Monte Carlo and variational calculations is carried out and the agreement is
found to be good. The limitations of an RPA-type approach are pointed out.Comment: 18 pages, revtex, 13 postscript figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Exciton effects in a scaling theory of intermediate valence and Kondo systems
An interplay of the Kondo scattering and exciton effects (d-f Coulomb
interaction) in the intermediate valence systems and Kondo lattices is
demonstrated to lead to an essential change of the scaling behavior in
comparison with the standard Anderson model. In particular, a marginal regime
can occur where characteristic fluctuation rate is proportional to flow cutoff
parameter. In this regime the "Kondo temperature" itself is strongly
temperature dependent which may give a key to the interpretation of
controversial experimental data for heavy fermion and related systems.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Time-dependent Gutzwiller approximation for the Hubbard model
We develop a time-dependent Gutzwiller approximation (GA) for the Hubbard
model analogous to the time-dependent Hartree-Fock (HF) method. The formalism
incorporates ground state correlations of the random phase approximation (RPA)
type beyond the GA. Static quantities like ground state energy and double
occupancy are in excellent agreement with exact results in one dimension up to
moderate coupling and in two dimensions for all couplings. We find a
substantial improvement over traditional GA and HF+RPA treatments. Dynamical
correlation functions can be easily computed and are also substantially better
than HF+RPA ones and obey well behaved sum rules.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Diagrammatic method for investigating universal behavior of impurity systems
The universal behavior of magnetic impurities in a metal is proved with the
help of skeleton diagrams. The energy scales are derived from the structure of
the skeleton diagrams. A minimal set of skeleton diagrams is sorted out that
scales exactly. For example, the non-crossing approximation for the Anderson
impurity model can describe the crossover phenomenon. The universal
Wilson-number is calculated within the non-crossing approximation. The method
allows for an assessment of various approximations for impurity Hamiltonians.Comment: 21 pages, 3 figure
Fermi Surface Properties of Low Concentration CeLaB: dHvA
The de Haas-van Alphen effect is used to study angular dependent extremal
areas of the Fermi Surfaces (FS) and effective masses of CeLaB alloys for between 0 and 0.05. The FS of these alloys was previously
observed to be spin polarized at low Ce concentration ( = 0.05). This work
gives the details of the initial development of the topology and spin
polarization of the FS from that of unpolarized metallic LaB to that of
spin polarized heavy Fermion CeB .Comment: 7 pages, 9 figures, submitted to PR
Inhomogeneous Gutzwiller approximation with random phase fluctuations for the Hubbard model
We present a detailed study of the time-dependent Gutzwiller approximation
for the Hubbard model. The formalism, labelled GA+RPA, allows us to compute
random-phase approximation-like (RPA) fluctuations on top of the Gutzwiller
approximation (GA). No restrictions are imposed on the charge and spin
configurations which makes the method suitable for the calculation of linear
excitations around symmetry-broken solutions. Well-behaved sum rules are obeyed
as in the Hartree-Fock (HF) plus RPA approach. Analytical results for a
two-site model and numerical results for charge-charge and current-current
dynamical correlation functions in one and two dimensions are compared with
exact and HF+RPA results, supporting the much better performance of GA+RPA with
respect to conventional HF+RPA theory.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figure
Newly formated (tertiary) lymphoid structures in tumor growth
Aim to reproduce tertiary lymphoid structures and study their features in a malignant neoplasm in the experiment.
Material and methods. Male white rats of the Wistar stress-resistant line were inoculated with the tumor strain sarcoma M1. Using the methods of microsurgical preparation, color lymphography and ultrasonic sonolipodestruction we isolated the lymph nodes without metastatic lesions (described as secondary in normal anatomy), the lymph nodes with metastases of M1 sarcoma, and the newly formed nodes (extrauterine or tertiary). Lymph nodes were examined macroscopically, micromorphometric studies were performed, histological and immunohistochemical signs of tertiary lymph nodes were determined. The obtained data were subjected to statistical analysis.
Results. In 60% of rats, in the right axillary region, in addition to the secondary lymph nodes described in normal anatomy, the tertiary lymph nodes were found on the side of the tumor. They were located near the histologically verified metastatic lymph node. The studied parameters of the main structural and functional zones of the tertiary lymph nodes had the following features: the enlarged marginal sinuses; a fewer number of lymphoid follicles; the average total area of blood vessels increased by 92% in relation to the metastatic lymph nodes and by 78% in relation to the secondary lymph nodes. The significant differences were registered with CD3, CD4, CD20, CD30 markers.
Conclusion. The study proved the possibility of reproducing tertiary lymphoid nodes in the experiment with malignant growth and revealed a number of their features
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